Didata features

Visual synthesis

Mind maps to see connections that linear summaries hide.

Generate, edit, and review mind maps from the content you study. Visual structure to consolidate dense subjects.

To turn fragmented material into an organized view, especially when you need to connect concepts.

Visual
topics connected
Editable
adjust after AI
Synthesis
high-level review

Ideal for

  • Subjects with many relationships between topics
  • Review before long exams
  • Synthesis after a class or long note

How it fits the routine

Four steps, one flow.

  1. 1

    Start from a note

    Use already-organized content as the base for the visual structure.

  2. 2

    Generate the map

    AI drafts a first architecture of concepts, groups, and connections.

  3. 3

    Reorganize

    Edit where your understanding asks for a different order.

  4. 4

    Review through the structure

    Use the map to recover relationships before going back to details.

Architecture

The map shows the shape of the subject.

In dense subjects, remembering the hierarchy helps as much as remembering definitions. Didata's mind map prioritizes relationships between concepts.

  • Grouping by main topics and subtopics.

  • Connections to review causality, sequence, and contrast.

  • Visual structure for fast review.

Editing

You shape the map to your way of thinking.

Good maps aren't only generated. They get refined to reflect the mental order you'll use during the exam.

  • Visual editing after generation.

  • Reorganization of groups and emphasis.

  • Bridge between detailed note and condensed review.

Consolidation

Visual review reinforces what text and questions can't show alone.

Mind maps consolidate the big picture while flashcards and exercises handle memory and application.

  • Useful before long question sets.

  • Helps you spot gaps in understanding.

  • Complements notes and flashcards without replacing either.

Frequently asked questions

Direct answers for what usually stalls the decision.

Are mind maps editable?

Yes. AI builds a base, but you can adjust the layout to better reflect your own studying.

When should I use mind maps?

They work well after the first pass on a topic, when you need to consolidate relationships and review the structure.

Start your study plan today.

Turn your first PDF, video, or class into notes, flashcards, exercises, and mind maps.